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HIT Newser: A Setback for MyMedicalRecords

flying cadeuciiThere’s No Place Like Epic’s Home

Epic reveals plans for a fifth campus, which is slated to include half a million square feet of office space and pay homage to literary classics like “Charlie and the Chocolate Factory” and “The Wizard of Oz.”

A Setback for MyMedicalRecords

A US District Court rules against MyMedicalRecords in its patent case against Walgreens, Quest Diagnostics, and others. MyMedicalRecords, a company that many label a patent troll, contends its patents covered a method of providing online PHRs in a private, secure way. However, a judge ruled that “the concept of secure record access and management, in the context of personal health records or not, is an age-old idea,” and is therefore abstract.

Despite the setback, I doubt MyMedicalRecords will stop demanding organizations to pay up or risk facing a lawsuit. I predict they’ll make some tweaks to their business plan, such as focusing only on organizations with not-quite-so-deep pockets that are willing to settle without a fight.

What Has $564 million Bought Us?

Sens. Lamar Alexander (R-TN), Richard Burr (R-NC), and Mike Enzi (R-WY) ask the General Accounting Office to review the ONC-funded health information exchanges to determine what exactly the exchanges created with the government’s $564 million in grant money.

It’s a valid concern, given the significant number of providers and regions still lacking electronic exchange capabilities and the millions that have been spent.

Physicians Reject Stage 2 Attestation

Fifty-five percent of physicians say they won’t attest for Stage 2 MU in 2015, according to a SERMO survey of about 2,000 physicians. Respondents cite several reasons for not attesting including financial concerns, difficulty engaging older patients, and lack of software usability.

Given the lackluster Stage 2 attestation numbers so far, the findings are not particularly surprising. It will be interesting to see what CMS and ONC intend to do in the face of the overwhelming evidence that many providers simply don’t think it is worth the effort.

On To Stage 3

The Office of Management and Budget is currently reviewing the proposed Stage 3 MU rules and will likely publish them in February. CMS states that Stage 3 will include changes to the reporting period, timelines, and structure of the program, including a single definition of Meaningful Use. CMS also adds that “these changes will provide a flexible, yet clearer, framework to ensure future sustainability of the EHR program and reduce confusion from multiple stage requirements.”

Can’t wait to see what is included. And, I can’t help but be a little amused that it’s been six years since the passage of the HITECH legislation and we are just now getting a definition for “Meaningful Use.”

Show Me the Money

Allina Health and Health Catalyst sign a $100 million definitive agreement to combine technologies, clinical content, and front-line personnel.

Rush University Medical Center will implement Merge Healthcare’s cardiology PACS.

Healthcare operating system platform provider Par80 closes $10.5 million in Series A funding led by Atlas Ventures, Founder Collective, and CHV Capital.

Health analytics provider Apervita, formerly knowns as Pervasive Health, completes an $18 million Series A round of funding led by GE Ventures and Baird Capital.

Teledermatology provider PocketDerm raises $2.85 million from an undisclosed investor.

Caremerge, developers of a care coordination platform, raises $4 million in a second round of funding. Investors include Cambia Health Solutions, GE Ventures, Arsenal Health, and Ziegler-LinkAge Longevity Fund.

Hearst Health Ventures and Catholic Health Initiatives lead a $37 million Series D funding round for Welltok, developers of a health optimization platform.

Health Information Network of Arizona selects Mirth to provide bidirectional exchange of PHI for connect health systems.

Patient engagement platform provider Wellbe secures $2.4 million from several investors.

Walgreens will connect its mobile and web apps with medical device connectivity and care coordination capabilities from Qualcomm’s Life’s 2net Platform.

South Carolina Sports Medicine & Orthopaedic Center implements Phreesia to automate patient check-in.

Northern Ohio Medical Specialists ACO goes live on eClinicalWorks Care Coordination Medical Records for population health management.

New Blood

AHIMA elects Cassi Birnbaum, SVP of HIM and consulting for Peak Health Systems, as president/chair for the 2015 board of directors.

CHIME and HIMSS name Sue Schade, CIO of the University of Michigan Hospitals and Health Centers, the recipient of the 2014 John E. Gall Jr CIO of the Year Award.

Streamline Health Solutions promotes EVP/COO David Sides to president/CEO, replacing Robert Watson who is leaving the company to become president of NantHealth.

Recondo Technology founder and former CEO names Rick Adam is named president and COO of Stanson Health, a clinical decision support and analytics company.

2 replies »

  1. That is what you get when Govy spends $ billions on medical devices that are illegal, in violation of the F D and C Act.

  2. Almost no one believes that EHR’s have yielded a net positive benefit.
    Most medical providers believe it has been a net negative.

    Yet billions have been spent….and the spending goes on and on.

    Why don’t we repeal any legislative mandates or HHS policy mandates and just stop? Let any private system that thinks they can make it work proceed, but stop the incentive payments and coercion…..the savings would be immediate and substantial.

    Perhaps some entity will figure out how to make EHR’s add value to patients or doctors…..but it has been shown that attempts to force adoption have been a huge negative. Won’t someone step up to stop the madness of forced adoption of an immature technology?